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1794 Flowing Hair Silver Dollar Another example of this rare first-issue coin reached a sale price of over $2.8 million. Its value is attributed to its age, design and the limited number of coins ...
Champion Auctions Hong Kong [48] August 2011 $1,292,500 1792 Half Disme J-7 Pattern United States Floyd Starr Heritage Auctions: August 2014 $1,292,500 1927 $20 United States Kramer, Richmond Heritage Auctions: March 2014 $1,292,500 1797 O-101a 50C United States Norweb Heritage Auctions: August 2014 $1,265,000 1795 Flowing Hair Silver Dollar
The Flowing Hair Dollar sold for $10 million at auction in 2013 to set a new world record for the highest price ever paid for a rare coin, CNN reported. That record was eclipsed in 2021 when a ...
A pattern for the Flowing Hair dollar, struck in copper without the obverse stars of the circulating issues. Early in 1794, engraver Robert Scot began preparing designs for the silver dollar. [11] Scot's initial design depicted a bust of Liberty, while his reverse featured an eagle, both required by the 1792 Coinage Act. [10]
Flowing Hair coinage was issued in the United States between 1793 and 1795. The design was used for the first half dime , half dollar , dollar , and the first two large cents . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
Gold K’uping Tael Pattern CD (1907): This rare Chinese coin sold for $720,000. From the Ch’ing Dynasty period, this coin had two different versions, 1906 and 1907, with 1907 editions being ...
Scot designed the popular and rare Flowing Hair dollar coinage along with the Liberty Cap half cent. Scot is perhaps best known for his design, the Draped Bust, which was used on many silver and copper coins. Robert Scot was the most prolific engraver of early American patriotic iconography, with symbols and images depicting rebellion, unity ...
Silver dollar coins. Flowing Hair dollar 1794–1795; Draped Bust dollar 1795–1803 Draped Bust, Small Eagle 1795–1798; Draped Bust, Heraldic Eagle 1798–1803, 1804 (not a regular issue) Gobrecht dollar 1836–1839; Seated Liberty dollar 1840–1873 Seated Liberty, no motto 1840–1865; Seated Liberty, with motto 1866–1873